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Thursday, January 18, 2018

On the Coffee Table: William Finnegan

Title: Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life
Author: William Finnegan
via Goodreads
It's already been a great month of reading for me.  I've given both of my last two reads five-star ratings at Goodreads, a big deal.  I'm overly generous with four-star ratings but I make up for it by being stingy with fives.  To encounter two within a couple weeks of each other is exciting.  This book is one.  I'll be sharing the other later this month.

Barbarian Days is, much as the subtitle suggests, a surfing memoir.  For William Finnegan, a longtime writer for the New Yorker, catching waves has been a lifelong obsession that has taken him all over the world. It's a book that inspires envy for me, the envy of those who have lived more adventurous lives than I have.  But at the same time, it reminds me of how lucky I have been for the stability I have enjoyed in exchange.

My wife, who had already read the book, asked if I was feeling inspired to surf.  In truth, few sports scare me more.  Combine an irrational fear of heights with an entirely healthy fear of the ocean and the idea of throwing myself at the mercy of the latter while perched several feet in the air upon a thin piece of plastic is the food of nightmares.  However, I do envy Finnegan for finding a hobby early in life that travels well and having sufficient fearlessness at the right age to pursue such travels.  There was a time in life when I could have chosen such a path - for me, it would have been scuba rather than surfing -  and for numerous reasons both sensible and gratifying, I am glad I didn't.  But I still occasionally dream wistfully of life choices not taken and that's a big one.

I don't understand most of Finnegan's surfspeak but the poetic language he employs to describe the pleasures of the wave is highly seductive anyway.  Much of the joy of the book, though, is in his descriptions of exotic locations and his colorful surf buddies.  Finnegan presents himself as the straight-man sidekick for each of his companions.  While that might be an accurate reflection of his relationships, it would be interesting to know what all of them think of him.  There's no questioning his devotion as he writes of surfing off Long Island during an ice storm, the sort of weather that would find me huddled under a warm blanket at home.

One of the most important questions I consider when evaluating a sports book is whether or not my sports-ambivalent wife would enjoy it.  The fact that she'd already read it and recommended it is highly significant.  The Pulitzer Prize Finnegan won for the book is also a strong point in its favor.

12 comments:

  1. Hmm... Interesting.
    But I think I had my fill surfing with 'Point Break.' The original one.

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    1. It's funny. The surfing is not what I remember from that movie. I remember the skydiving - even bigger nightmare for the acrophobe.

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    2. There's skydiving in it?
      I guess it's been longer than I thought.

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    3. Surf documentaries can be fun. The Endless Summer films are good. Even though I would never do it, I enjoy watching.

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  2. Yes, I don't have the heart to do it, but I do enjoy watching all these adrenalin rushing activities in movies. Loved Point Break!

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    1. Ski movies are fun, too. Again, I'd never do it myself.

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  3. Early in my life when I lived by the ocean (and yes I was young once) I body surfed. I loved it, just the best. I only lost my top a few times ! You learned quickly to face away from shore as you came up for air just in case.
    I miss living by the ocean.

    cheers, parsnip and mandibles

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    1. I get the impression wardrobe malfunctions is one of the sport's inherent risks for all participants.

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    2. A good wave can drop/push down into the sand and as you come up for air you can leave lots behind. I once scraped my knees and chest really awful.
      But as I remember my goodness it was fun !

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    3. Yes, the injuries he describes - and shrugs off rather casually - are more than I could weather.

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    4. I think if you lived by the ocean you would have tried surfing. Not the the stand up and go for the big waves but closer to the shore body surfing. You can learn in a second. And reading the waves is great !

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    5. Don't get me wrong. I LOVE the ocean and enjoy playing in the waves. But I do know my limits. I've only even been on a skateboard once and I was terrified.

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